im now seriously into kiting and looking at going traveling i have a flexi 140 board and a slingshot fuell 11m so im looking for a bag to put it all in and go travelling i was looking at the new north bags but are they any good or any reviws on other ones

Yes, get very good at saying, "No, there is no surfing equipment. It is a golf bag. It says golf." Do not offer to open the bag. They don't have the right to search your bag (usually but maybe there are some weird countries).

I've flown my kite bag all over Europe, North America, Asia, and Africa and have yet to pay a single dollar in excess baggage fee for it.

From my own experiences, I now try to keep my travel bag as short as possible. Long bags around 165cm seem to attract a lot more raised eyebrows at check-in than those around 135cm. Shorter bags are also a lot easier to fit into a taxi which may or may not form part of your journey. Depends a bit on how and where you're travelling but if I'm using a schedule airline and a taxi at the other end I use the 135cm. If you do try the golf bag, dont expect them to believe you if its massive.

Many of the airliners changed their rules and working more with weight/length. What I found is if you keep you luggage under 158cm and 23 kg your fine with most traditional airline company nevertheless what you carry. Under 20 kg you manage most lowfair airliners as well.Exception from this is of course all tour operators that always charge extra nevertheless if it's golf or boards in the bag, might be a little bit cheaper with golf though.

Might be good to always read the fine print and print it and take it with you to the checkin counter. Couple of times the person in front of me invented their own rules (yes in Europe), sometimes they have been to my advantage sometimes disadvantage, always good with the fine print.

My experience is that it's still a Jungle to travel with kite gear, but on the other side hopfully you travel to a fantastic spot

Be careful when using the 158cm rule. I'm sure what hced wrote is true, but also note that some airlines use 158cm as a 'linear measurement limit', meaning the total of length + width + height added together, so a kite bag would easily exceed this. Make sure you read the criteia for the airline you're using and check whether its 'overall length' or 'total linear measurement'.